Tag Archives: authorship

Stolen Valour, Borrowed Honour, and Intellectual Property

This article uses the concept of stolen valour as a metaphor to examine recognition, attribution, and integrity in intellectual property, research, and start-ups. It explores the difference between honour that can be shared and credit that must be earned, arguing that while recognition can be gifted, it only retains meaning when grounded in truth. When attribution is misused, generosity curdles into erasure.

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Shakespeare Is My Meat; I Sup Upon A Classicalist

Do you like Shakespeare? Me too. But I don’t need to go “all in” and lose sight you can just “enjoy” the stuff. This essay mounts a post-structuralist assault on Shakespearean canon-worship, arguing that four centuries of criticism function less as interpretation than as institutional maintenance. It interrogates why Shakespeare must always matter, why scholars struggle to like the plays without theory, and why universality is retroactively imposed. By stripping away reverence, the essay asks an obscene but clarifying question: “What if they are just entertainment for Elizabethan wankers?” and insists on Shakespeare’s mortality as a condition of honest criticism.

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